Yes, I do. Thank you again.
I think we've been focused very much on the health care sector with our local planning. What the communication strategies need to do, with leadership from the Public Health Agency and the federal government, is to liaise with organizations such as the Federation of Canadian Municipalities to tell them what is going on, to engage with them to determine what they think their critical communication leads are, and then to have your provincial and territorial counterparts liaise with.... We have the Union of B.C. Municipalities, for example, which will be meeting in September, and I anticipate that H1N1 preparedness will be a key focus of what we'll do in British Columbia.
So I think we need a template of broad messaging and to get people to build into a social marketing or informational database or campaign and pick out what those key messages are and then drive them down into the provinces and territories, and then further down, in B.C. for example, into our regional health authorities—or in Ontario it would be through, I guess, their 38 public health units, which were often creatures of the municipality, or were co-funded by them.